Boat Loader reduction gearbox details needed
Submitted: Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 15:54
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Member - bungarra (WA)
I am considering building my own boat loader for the top of the 'cruiser.
One thing (amongst a few others) is the type / style of the reduction gear box required to use a 12v drill on to operate the winch. I have not had the opportunity to see any makes or models at close range and so I am running blind apart from a few photos on the web of the commercial ones out there
I have a few ideas of my own but the one thing I cant afford to make a mistake in purchasing is the winch assembley.........is there anyone able to tell me what theirs is?.......ratio, make / type / style, tech details etc
much appreciated if some info could be sent
had anyone made their own like I am considering ?....yes, I have used this sites search engine
Thanks
Reply By: time waster - Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 17:30
Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 17:30
I made our boat loader using the winch on the car, not sure how to post
pic's here but I have them on the caravan
forum http://caravanersforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=73&t=12617
Christian
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Follow Up By: Member - bungarra (WA) - Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 22:02
Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 22:02
Thnaks for that...looks very good apart from the initial lift to the vertical.......
.I do have a front mounted winch such as you have and am considering some form of yoke to pull it from the upright position and up and over as
well
maybe at the end of the day I may have to lift just like you do abd then follow your example
cheers
FollowupID:
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Reply By: Member - Joe n Mel n kids (FNQ - Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 18:02
Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 18:02
you cab buy very cheap boat trailer
winches from some auot shops, light duty but ample for what you want.... i think ??...
I am fairly certain thye are under $200, you will end up spending more in the long run and they have the remote controls and all ...
E-bay have em for $120 bucks, 2000lbs with wire rope, hooks, remote control ect .... cant go wrong :=)
AnswerID:
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Follow Up By: Member - Joe n Mel n kids (FNQ - Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 18:08
Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 18:08
say what,,,, my spelling is crap...... beer oclock time :-)
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718300
Follow Up By: Member - bungarra (WA) - Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 22:00
Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 22:00
Thanks for that......what I am chasing is the specs or where to buy a worm drive reduction gearbox suitable to be turned by a 12v electric drill..
this is what the commercial loaders use.........I was hoping someone with one can look on theirs and see if it has a brand or sticker or specs
FollowupID:
718312
Follow Up By: Member - Joe n Mel n kids (FNQ - Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 22:29
Saturday, Feb 19, 2011 at 22:29
jump on line .... rs components australia ..... everything you will need to build what you want ,,(
well i think anyway..)
Cheers
Joe
FollowupID:
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Follow Up By: V8 Troopie - Sunday, Feb 20, 2011 at 00:58
Sunday, Feb 20, 2011 at 00:58
I did not see any worm drives in the latest RS components catalog.
Bungarra, I'm making my own worm drive. 36:1 should do it, testing this tomorrow.
Its a side loader BTW.
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Follow Up By: Member - bungarra (WA) - Sunday, Feb 20, 2011 at 09:43
Sunday, Feb 20, 2011 at 09:43
V8...I am not completely locked into a rear loader and would be interested in any comments and ideas you have on the side loader you are building
as for making your own worm drive that sounds like something interesting but tricky......I have a
well equiped workshop but I am assuming a lathe of some sort is required unless there are various componets off the shelf that you are sourcing?
cheers
FollowupID:
718330
Follow Up By: V8 Troopie - Monday, Feb 21, 2011 at 02:15
Monday, Feb 21, 2011 at 02:15
bungarra, the reason for a side loader is the 26' sailboat hitched behind the car - too much trouble to unhitch it to load/unload the dinghy.
Making worm drives is not too tricky - I'm not a machinist - but doable on a decent lathe. The worm only requires a feed ratio to suit (4mm pitch in my case) and a tool ground for acme thread.
The gear is the tricky bit, I managed to adapt the thread cutting spindle with an addition of a toothed belt sprocket. This drives another at about level with the compound feed handwheel. I then fit my dividing head in place of the compound feed, couple its input via universal joints (from 1/4" socket drives) to the output of the toothed belt shaft.
Working through the change gear ratios of the thread cutting spindle I found a large number of gear teeth were possible, from 36 to many hundreds...
The table of the dividing head is horizontal and rotates the gear blank at the disired speed ratio to the lathe spindle. A single cutting tooth rotating on a shaft between chuck and life center does the gear cutting.
Good luck if you're game to try this, I found it fun to figure out, have never read or heard anybody else doing it this way.
FollowupID:
718420
Reply By: Member - Bruce C (NSW) - Sunday, Feb 20, 2011 at 08:32
Sunday, Feb 20, 2011 at 08:32
Hi Bungarra,
My nephew made his own roof top loader using , as suggested above, a cheap boat winch from Supercheap.
His is fitted to the front rack if I can recall corectly and the whole unit is as neat as a bought one.
He never fails to get asked questions about it wherever he goes.
Pretty simple setup from what I saw.
If you get stuck MM me and I will get some pics and details from him and send them to you via email or MM.
Cheers, Bruce.
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